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SURFACING

OPENING AT GOODMAN GALLERY CAPE TOWN

SATURDAY 22 MARCH AT 11H00

22 March  19 April 2014

 

 

CANDICE BREITZ | KUDZANAI CHIURAI | MOUNIR FATMI | KENDELL GEERS | HAROON GUNN-SALIE | ALFREDO JAAR | WILLIAM KENTRIDGE | LIZA LOU MIKHAEL SUBOTZKY | JOHAN THOM

 

Surfacing is a group exhibition which allows for an exploration of the transient space between destruction and (re)construction. The exhibition aims to bring to light the fragments and residues that remain after destruction, and linger beneath a new form. In the preface to the 1961 edition of Frantz Fanon’s The Wretched of the Earth, Jean-Paul Sartre writes “violence is man re-creating himself.” Although Sartre speaks of violence as a necessity for overthrowing colonial power, “no gentleness can efface the marks of violence; only violence itself can destroy them.” This exhibition understands Sartre’s notion to address culpability, selfhood and violence and trauma involved in the process of becoming, scrutinizing and (re)creating.

Click here for more information and images

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New works from the Animal Series 2013 - 2014

New works from the Animal Series 2013 – 2014

Nirox Projects at Arts on Main presents a new series of works from the Animal Series by Johan Thom. Central to this series of works is Thom’s ongoing investigation of his own material encounter with an African elephant skull.

The exhibition is divided into three bodies of works: etchings; drawings and sculpture. Over the period of eight months Thom produced a set of five large-scale etchings in collaboration with Willem Boshoff, Diane Victor, David Koloane and Bevan de Wet. In collaboration with Thom, each artist was invited to create an aesthetic response to the elephant skull: Thom would first work on the plate by for example making a full body print or scratching the plate’s surface with the elephant skull. After this, the plate was given to the collaborating artist to work over and layer by adding further marks, visual or conceptual elements, drawing from the encounter with the elephant skull.

The exhibition also includes a set of charcoal and mixed media drawings that remind of Rorschach patterns. These observational drawings appear almost ghost-like in their rendering of the three-dimensional shape of the skull in shades of white upon blotches of ordinary blackboard paint.

Also showing as part of this exhibition is a bronze and mixed media sculpture produced in collaboration with Guy du Toit.

The artist wishes to thank the Nirox Foundation for their generous support throughout this project and the Artist Proof Studios.

Opening Sunday 16 February @ 12:00

Exhibition runs until 9 March 2014

Dimensions: 42 x 29,7 cm

Dimensions: 42 x 29,7 cm

For more information, please contact Neil Nieuwoudt on T: +27 (0)11 7887902 | M: +27 (0)72 350 4326 |

E: neil.nieuwoudt@gmail.com

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Nirox Projects | 264 Fox Street | Arts on Main | MABONENG PRECINCT |

Johannesburg

www.niroxarts.com

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ALSO SEE: Animal – a new series of works | May – July 2013

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“I am the director (we must have direction beyond the mere fact of our course, of our direction, our charter, the map and the stars we follow)”web-2014-J-Thom

Photographic still from HOUSEBOAT #1

Performance on 31 January 2014 in Antwerp as part of the exhibition ‘Nomad Bodies’ curated by Elfriede Dreyer with glass sheet, flour and honey.

This work is part of a new series of works by Johan Thom centred on exploring the notion of the ‘houseboat’. To be clear this is distinct from the more commonplace concept of the ‘boathouse’ (a boat on water that doubles as a human habitat).

In this sense the houseboat signals a rethinking of the ordinary house as being a stationary built environment inhabited by individuals, families and so forth.

In this series of artworks the notion of the house as an ordinary private dwelling is displaced in favour of a more open-ended understanding: the house become a space through-and-by which real and imagined journeys into the world are undertaken on a daily basis. The house now becomes something like a ghost ship – a simultaneously ethereal & concrete framework that accompanies and informs ones myriad interactions with the surrounding world. The houseboat is never left behind as one travels into world but an every present reality in ones daily life.

For Houseboat #1 my voice became a virtual ‘speaking of’ the houseboat and its crew as they journey into the world. For me, these multiple voices are the material embodiment of the interactive relationship between the houseboat, the various individuals that inhabit it and the world they encounter on their journey.

At the end of the performance I simply let go of the glass sheet.

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“I dislike the uncritical celebration of form that often accompanies the idea of outrageous fashion and costume as some kind of new-found freedom of identity” Johan Thom

Quoted in the article ‘Welcome to the cabaret of art’ by Sean O’ Toole and published in the Mail and Guardian.

Artists are dressing up – or undressing – to make a point about who they really are. But is the spectacle more than just cheap drag?

Full article here:
http://mg.co.za/article/2013-10-11-00-welcome-to-the-cabaret-of-art

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From the archives: Entefada (2002)

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http://years.dk/buroarbeit/

Tagensvej 58, 2200 Copenhagen
Thur–Sat 13-17
email@years.dk   +45 30 27 18 51   fb

09 november–01 december 2013

Büroarbeit

 

Cevdet Erek, Saskia Groneberg, Anetta Mona Chişa and Lucia Tkáčová, Johan Thom

Curated by Nico Anklam

 

Walkthrough and publication release Sat 30 Nov at 2 pm

 

Curator Nico Anklam will do an introduction to the exhibition on Saturday 30, 2 pm. On the same occasion YEARS, Zwölf Berlin and Nico Anklam have produced a publication for the exhibition which will be released: an alphabetical case folder comprehends installation shots as actual printed photographs and a short text by the curator. As such the “catalog” presents itself as a dossier, record or act compilation that will remain as a file in the archives, libraries and personal bookshelves it will go to.

For the exhibition Büroarbeit an edition of 16 + 4 APs was produced which includes contributions by each of the artists in relation to their works on display and the overall theme of office work. The edition box, a wooden pen stand that one knows from office desks is on display in YEARS’ window and has filled itself over the duration of the show with the different contributions from the artists.

 

 

all-periods-in-capital

Anetta Mona Chişa and Lucia Tkáčová
All Periods in Capital, 2007
clay, acrylic paint, plastic bag
ca. 40 x 40 x 40 cm
Courtesy Christine König Galerie, Wien/Vienna

 

Press

Büroarbeit takes the exhibition venue – a former shop now used as an office and exhibition site – as a starting point. The four works on view relate to aesthetic, social and political dimensions of the office space as such and the labor therein.

The artist duo Anetta Mona Chişa and Lucia Tkáčová (Prague/Berlin) shows the work All periods in Capital (2007). In a white plastic bag one finds 22,591 clay globules. Each one was hand made by the artists for every period – the full stop punctuation mark – in Karl Marx’s Das Kapital. In doing so, the artists not only produce a physical, hand made product, they also perform manually the very alienation of mass production that Marx denounced with every ‘point’ they make.

The office as an aesthetic experience resonates in such tools as staplers, pencils and folders, and also in Istanbul based Cevdet Erek’s rulers. One of Erek’s plastic rulers shows only two marks though: to the very left “now”, to the very right “end” (2011). It becomes a false twins of the objects we are used to: their scaling does not measure a distance of space by reproducing a spatial object, but rather they are spatial objects that pretend to measure time – through space. This seemingly defined time space gets infinitely mirrored in the glass shelves at YEARS and blends in to the overall reduced setting of the exhibition site.

Saskia Groneberg’s research project Büropflanze (2012) is concerned with the plants in offices. A common element of many office spaces is the potted plant, which encompass many functions: from sheer agents to enrich the color palette in rather sterile settings to infiltrations of wilderness in a space that is connoted with regulations and standardizations. Groneberg’s photographic images of specimens are colored scans from the flora she found in various office locations. While the depiction reminds one also of illustrations from natural history books, for Büroarbeit her print
30-1.07+30.8 stadt münchen pflanze was mounted on a shelf that alludes to window sills. The image is therewith also in a place where its referent, the plant, could be found in its office habitat.
With Johan Thom’s single channel video The Pencil Test (2003), the office stands for a site of institutional power. His video shows a face covered by pencils that are held by a white hair net. Thom’s video relates to an absurd decision making process from Apartheid times when people of mixed background were classified at the state office. “It was thought, that if the pencil remained stuck in ones hair, you were ‘black’“ states Thom. Here the office becomes a metaphor for a site of decision-making processes that – despite their gravity – are often invisible or behind the scenes.

 

 

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The exhibition is supported by the Danish Arts Council.

Statens_Kunstraad_LOGO_PMS

 

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Image
VUSI BEAUCHAMP / JACO BOUWER / TEGAN BRISTOW / THE BROTHER MOVES ON / CUSS GROUP / THE FROWN / HAROON GUNN-SALIE / MURRAY KRUGER / GERALD MACHONA / MISCHECK MASAMVU / TIFFANY MENTOOR / THENJIWE NKOSI / JOHAN THOM / MJ TURPIN / VINTAGE CRU / JESSICA WEBSTER / NELISIWE XABA & MOCKE VAN VEURENCURATED BY EMMA LAURENCE

GOODMAN GALLERY JOHANNESBURG

OPENING SATURDAY 27 JULY 2013 AT 18H00

“THE POSTCOLONY REVISITED”: OPENING ADDRESS BY ACHILLE MBEMBE AT 18H30


OPENING AFTER-PARTY

SATURDAY 27 JULY 2013 FROM 20H00
GOODMAN GALLERY JOHANNESBURG BASEMENT
FEATURING:
THE FROWN
THE BROTHER MOVES ON
TICKETS AVAILABLE FROM GOODMAN GALLERY JOHANNESBURG, TOKYO STAR AND OTHER VENUES TBC
FREE BUT LIMITED

In July this year Goodman Gallery Johannesburg will present the group exhibition [Working Title] 2013. This is the second installment of the annual group exhibition of the same name, the first of which premiered at Goodman Gallery Cape Town in 2012 and was curated by Federico Freschi. The [Working Title] exhibitions are part of a new initiative by the Goodman Gallery aimed at supporting young artists, independent projects and major installations and performances.

In the past Goodman Gallery has collaborated with independent curators such as Simon Njami and Bettina Malcomess, who curated the US exhibition, part of which was shown at Goodman Gallery Projects at Arts on Main in 2009. In 2010 independent curator and academic Nontobeko Ntombela curated the exhibition Layers at Goodman Gallery Projects as part of her ongoing research into the creative strategies of women artists, in particular those that aim to contextualise socio-political issues. In 2011 Goodman Gallery curators Tony East and Claire van Blerck produced The Night Show, a 3-part exhibition staged at Goodman Gallery Cape Town, which sought to destabilise the notion of the white cube and to engage with contemporary art practice on its own terms, courting the spontaneous and embracing the ephemeral.

Previous projects also include the site specific street performance Cut / Cute by Joel Andrianomearisoa, which premiered in Johannesburg as part of SA Fashion Week, and Nelisiwe Xaba and Mocke van Veuren’s performance Uncles and Angels, which was presented at Goodman Gallery Projects as part of the Dance Umbrella.

Goodman Gallery continues to collaborate with academics and theorists, and has hosted lectures by Jane Taylor, Federico Freschi and Alfredo Jaar – whose lecture coincided with his 2012 exhibition at the Goodman Gallery Gold in the Morning – and panel discussions with David Goldblatt, Ivan Vladislavić and Marlene van Niekerk.

While Goodman Gallery Projects closed at Arts on Main in 2012, the [Working Title] exhibition series exists as a resolution to the Goodman Gallery’s continued interest in independent and collaborative projects and allows for the continuation of previous projects and relationships, as well as the introduction of new artists, theorists and creatives into the Goodman Gallery. Each year the [Working Title] exhibition will have a new curator, either from the Goodman Gallery or through collaboration with an invited external curator.

This year’s [Working Title] is curated by Emma Laurence and includes artists who are pushing the limits of the contemporary South African art scene and who have produced work that is at the cutting edge of current art production. The exhibition is concerned with works that are born out of dynamic and independent practice. Included in the exhibition are artists who work across disciplines and who bring into the perceived elite gallery space sub-cultural aesthetics and standpoints.

The show incorporates artists working in various and perhaps unconventional media such as interactive gaming, short stories and punk inspired performance, as well as artists who begin to interrogate modes of representation and viewing in painting and photography. During the run of the show, a series of scheduled events will take place as part of [Working Title] and will include an off-site project by Cuss Group called Video Party, a performance after the opening by The Frown and The Brother Moves On and an opening address and lecture by distinguished theorist Achille Mbembe, who will speak on “The Postcolony Revisited”. Professor Mbembe’s lecture is co-sponsored by WISER (Wits Institute for Economic Research).


GOODMAN GALLERY JOHANNESBURG:
163 Jan Smuts Avenue, Parkwood, Johannesburg, 2193

T: +27-11-788-1113 | F: +27-11-788-9887 | jhb@goodman-gallery.com | www.goodman-gallery.com
Gallery Hours: Tuesday–Friday 09h30–17h30, Saturday 09h30–16h00, Closed Monday

 

Press coverage:

Wed 24 July 2013, Die Beeld (see: http://www.beeld.com/vermaak/2013-07-24-dissiplines-se-grense-vervaag) also posted in ‘Press | Disspilines se grense vervaag’.

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Malmo Konsthall presents
*STILL FIGHTING IGNORANCE & INTELLECTUAL PERFIDY*
Video art from Africa
Curated by Kisito Assangni

2 March – 7 April 2013

MALMO KONSTHALL
C-Salen
S:t Johannesgatan 7
250 80 Malmo
Sweden
www.konsthall.malmo.se
http://sfip-project.blogspot.com

Including
Said Afifi | Nirveda Alleck | Jude Anogwih | Younes Baba-Ali | Rehema
Chachage | Saidou Dicko | Ndoye Douts | Kokou Ekouagou | Mohamed El Baz |
Samba Fall | Dimitri Fagbohoun | Wanja Kimani | Nicene Kossentini | Kai
Lossgott | Michele Magema | Nathalie Mba Bikoro | Victor Mutelekesha |
Johan Thom | Saliou Traoré | Guy Woueté | Ezra Wube

Project [SFIP] is a multi-national exhibition process and a platform for
critical thinking, researching and presenting African video art.

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National Centre for Contemporary Arts presents
 
STILL FIGHTING IGNORANCE & INTELLECTUAL PERFIDY
Video art from Africa
Curated by Kisito Assangni
 
2 November 2012 
 
NATIONAL CENTRE FOR CONTEMPORARY ARTS
123342, 13, Build.2
Zoologicheskaya St
Moscow
Russia
 
Including
Jude Anogwih | Younes Baba-Ali | Saidou Dicko | Ndoye Douts | Kokou Ekouagou | Mohamed El Baz | Samba Fall | Nicene Kossentini | Kai Lossgott | Michele Magema | Nathalie Mba Bikoro | Johan Thom | Saliou Traoré | Guy Woueté | Ezra Wube
 

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